Wild Adventures In Bed
img img Wild Adventures In Bed img Chapter 7 C7
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Chapter 12 C12 img
Chapter 13 C13 img
Chapter 14 C14 img
Chapter 15 C15 img
Chapter 16 C16 img
Chapter 17 C17 img
Chapter 18 C18 img
Chapter 19 C19 img
Chapter 20 C20 img
Chapter 21 C21 img
Chapter 22 C22 img
Chapter 23 C23 img
Chapter 24 C24 img
Chapter 25 C25 img
Chapter 26 C26 img
Chapter 27 C27 img
Chapter 28 C28 img
Chapter 29 C29 img
Chapter 30 C30 img
Chapter 31 C31 img
Chapter 32 C32 img
Chapter 33 C33 img
Chapter 34 C34 img
Chapter 35 C35 img
Chapter 36 C36 img
Chapter 37 C37 img
Chapter 38 C38 img
Chapter 39 C39 img
Chapter 40 C40 img
Chapter 41 C41 img
Chapter 42 C42 img
Chapter 43 C43 img
Chapter 44 C44 img
Chapter 45 C45 img
Chapter 46 C46 img
Chapter 47 C47 img
Chapter 48 C48 img
Chapter 49 C49 img
Chapter 50 C50 img
Chapter 51 C51 img
Chapter 52 C52 img
Chapter 53 C53 img
Chapter 54 C54 img
Chapter 55 C55 img
Chapter 56 C56 img
Chapter 57 C57 img
Chapter 58 C58 img
Chapter 59 C59 img
Chapter 60 C60 img
Chapter 61 C61 img
Chapter 62 C62 img
Chapter 63 C63 img
Chapter 64 C64 img
Chapter 65 C65 img
Chapter 66 C66 img
Chapter 67 C67 img
Chapter 68 C68 img
Chapter 69 C69 img
Chapter 70 C70 img
Chapter 71 C71 img
Chapter 72 C72 img
Chapter 73 C73 img
Chapter 74 C74 img
Chapter 75 C75 img
Chapter 76 C76 img
Chapter 77 C77 img
Chapter 78 C78 img
Chapter 79 C79 img
Chapter 80 C80 img
Chapter 81 C81 img
Chapter 82 C82 img
Chapter 83 C83 img
Chapter 84 C84 img
Chapter 85 C85 img
Chapter 86 C86 img
Chapter 87 C87 img
Chapter 88 C88 img
Chapter 89 C89 img
Chapter 90 C90 img
Chapter 91 C91 img
Chapter 92 C92 img
Chapter 93 C93 img
Chapter 94 C94 img
Chapter 95 C95 img
Chapter 96 C96 img
Chapter 97 C97 img
Chapter 98 C98 img
Chapter 99 C99 img
Chapter 100 C100 img
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Chapter 7 C7

"I won't hurt her, lad," Alan said softly.

He knelt down and brushed aside the hair from her face and realized she was unconscious. There was a bruise on one cheek, but otherwise she didn't look injured.

"Where is she hurt?" he asked Crispen.

Tears filled Crispen's eyes, and he wiped hastily at them with the back of his grubby hand.

"Her stomach. And her back. It hurts her fierce if anyone touches her."

Carefully, so as not to alarm the boy, Alan pulled at her clothing. When her abdomen and back came into view, he sucked in his breath. Around him, his men alternately cursed and murmured their pity for the slight lass.

"God in heaven, what happened to her?" Alan asked.

Her entire rib cage was purple, and ugly bruises marred her smooth back. He could swear one of them was in the shape of a man's boot.

"He beat her," Crispen choked out. "Take us home, Uncle Alan. I want my papa."

Not wanting the boy to lose his composure in front of the other men, Alan nodded and patted him on the arm. There would be plenty of time to get the story from Crispen later. Edward would want to hear it all.

He stared down at the unconscious woman and frowned. She had offered her body for Crispen's, and yet she wore the colors of Duncan Cameron. Edward would be beyond control if Cameron had any involvement in Crispen's disappearance.

War. At long last, war would be declared.

He motioned for Cormac to tend to the lass, and he reached for Crispen, intending that the boy ride with him. There were several questions he wanted answered on the ride home.

Crispen shook his head adamantly. "Nay, you take her, Uncle Alan. She has to ride with you. I promised her that Papa would keep her safe, but he's not here so you have to do it. You have to."

Alan sighed. There was no reasoning with the boy, and right now he was so glad he was alive, he'd cede to his ridiculous demands. Later he'd bend the brat's ear about not questioning authority.

"I want to ride with you, too," Crispen said, his gaze nervously going to the woman.

He inched closer to her as if he couldn't stand the idea of being separated from her.

Alan looked skyward. Edward hadn't taken a firm enough hand with the boy. That was all there was to it.

And so Alan found himself astride his horse with the woman draped across the saddle in front of him, her body shielded in the crook of one arm, while Crispen sat on his other leg, his head nestled against her bosom.

He glared at his men, daring even one of them to laugh. Hell, he had to relinquish his sword for the duty of carrying the two extra persons, never mind their weight didn't equal that of a single warrior.

Edward just better be damn grateful. He could decide what was to be done with the woman just as soon as Alan dumped her into Edward's lap.

As soon as they crossed over the border onto Woods land, a shout went up that echoed through the hills, and in the distance, Mary heard the cry taken up and relayed. Soon, the laird would know of his son's return.

She twisted the reins nervously in her fingers as Crispen all but bounced off the saddle in his excitement.

"If you keep gathering those reins, lass, you and the horse are going to end up back where you came from."

She glanced guiltily up at Alan Woods, who rode to her right. His admonishment had come out as a tease, but God's truth, the man scared her. He looked savage with his unkempt, long dark hair and the braids dangling on each side of his temples.

When she'd awakened in his arms, she'd nearly tossed them both out of the saddle in her haste to escape. He'd been forced to pry both her and Crispen from their perch against him, and he'd put them both on the ground until the entire thing could be sorted out.

He hadn't been pleased by her stubbornness, but she had Crispen solidly on her side, and having extracted a promise from Crispen to tell no one her name, they'd both stood mute when Alan demanded answers.

Oh, he'd blustered and waved his arms. Even threatened to choke the both of them, and in the end he'd muttered blasphemies against women and children before resuming their journey to bring Crispen home.

Alan had then insisted she ride with him at least another day, because he said, in no uncertain terms, the likelihood of her sitting a horse by herself in her condition was nil, and it was a sin to abuse a good horse with an inept mount.

The journey that would normally last two days took them three, thanks to Alan's consideration of her condition and their stopping frequently to rest. She knew Alan was considerate because he told her. Numerous times.

After the first day, she was determined to ride without Alan's assistance, if for no other reason than to wipe the smugness from his expression. He obviously had no patience for women, and, she suspected, with the exception of his nephew, whom he obviously loved, he had even less patience with children.

Still, given the fact that he knew nothing about her, only that Crispen championed her, he had treated her well, and his men had been politely respectful.

Now that they neared Laird Woods's stronghold, fear fluttered in her throat. She would no longer be able to keep silent. The laird would demand answers, and she would be obligated to give them.

She leaned down to whisper close to Crispen's ear. "Do you remember your promise to me, Crispen?"

"Aye," he whispered back. "I'm not to tell anyone your name."

She nodded, feeling guilty for asking such a thing from the boy, but if she could pretend to be of no importance, just someone who happened upon Crispen and saw him safely back to his father, perhaps he would be grateful enough to provide a horse and maybe some food, and she could be on her way.

"Not even your father," she pressed.

Crispen nodded solemnly. "I'll only tell him you saved me."

She squeezed his arm with her free hand. "Thank you. I could ask for no better champion."

He turned his head back to grin broadly at her, his back puffing with pride.

"What are the two of you whispering about?" Alan demanded irritably.

She glanced over to see the warrior watching her, his eyes narrow with suspicion.

"If I wanted you to know, I'd have spoken louder," she said calmly.

He turned away muttering what she was sure were more blasphemies about annoying females.

"You must make the priest weary with the length of your confessions," she said.

He raised one eyebrow. "Who says I confess anything?"

She shook her head. The arrogant man probably thought his path to heaven was already assured, and that he acted in accordance to God's will just by breathing.

"Look, there it is!" Crispen shouted as he pointed eagerly ahead.

They topped the hill and looked down at the stone keep nestled into the side of the next hill.

The skirt was crumbled in several places, and there was a detail of men working steadily, replacing the stones at the wall. What she could see of the keep above the outer walls looked blackened by an old fire.

The loch spread out to the right of the keep, the water glistening in the sunlight. One of the fingers meandered around the front of the keep, providing a natural barrier to the front gate. The bridge across it, however, sagged precariously in the middle. A temporary, narrow path over the water had been fashioned to the side, and it would only allow one horse at a time into the keep.

Despite the obvious state of disrepair to the keep, the land was beautiful. Scattered across the valley to the left of the keep, sheep grazed, herded by an older man flanked by two dogs. Occasionally one of the dogs raced out to herd the sheep back into the imaginary boundary, and then he'd return to his master to receive an approving pat on the head.

She turned to Alan, who'd pulled to a stop beside her. "What happened here?"

But he didn't answer. A deep scowl creased his face, and his eyes went nearly black. She gripped the reins a little tighter and shivered under the intensity of his hatred. Aye, hatred. There could be no other term for what she saw in his eyes.

            
            

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